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IMDbPro

Pacto de Justiça

Título original: Open Range
  • 2003
  • 14
  • 2 h 19 min
AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
7,4/10
82 mil
SUA AVALIAÇÃO
POPULARIDADE
1.581
1.600
Kevin Costner in Pacto de Justiça (2003)
Drama de épocaDrama históricoÉpico de faroesteAçãoDramaOcidenteRomance

Um ex-pistoleiro é forçado a pegar em armas novamente quando ele e seu bando sào ameaçados por um policial corrupto.Um ex-pistoleiro é forçado a pegar em armas novamente quando ele e seu bando sào ameaçados por um policial corrupto.Um ex-pistoleiro é forçado a pegar em armas novamente quando ele e seu bando sào ameaçados por um policial corrupto.

  • Direção
    • Kevin Costner
  • Roteiristas
    • Lauran Paine
    • Craig Storper
  • Artistas
    • Kevin Costner
    • Robert Duvall
    • Diego Luna
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • AVALIAÇÃO DA IMDb
    7,4/10
    82 mil
    SUA AVALIAÇÃO
    POPULARIDADE
    1.581
    1.600
    • Direção
      • Kevin Costner
    • Roteiristas
      • Lauran Paine
      • Craig Storper
    • Artistas
      • Kevin Costner
      • Robert Duvall
      • Diego Luna
    • 593Avaliações de usuários
    • 143Avaliações da crítica
    • 67Metascore
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
  • Veja as informações de produção no IMDbPro
    • Prêmios
      • 1 vitória e 5 indicações no total

    Fotos113

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    Elenco principal29

    Editar
    Kevin Costner
    Kevin Costner
    • Charley Waite
    Robert Duvall
    Robert Duvall
    • Boss Spearman
    Diego Luna
    Diego Luna
    • Button
    Abraham Benrubi
    Abraham Benrubi
    • Mose
    Annette Bening
    Annette Bening
    • Sue Barlow
    Michael Gambon
    Michael Gambon
    • Denton Baxter
    Michael Jeter
    Michael Jeter
    • Percy
    James Russo
    James Russo
    • Sheriff Poole
    Dean McDermott
    Dean McDermott
    • Doc Barlow
    Kim Coates
    Kim Coates
    • Butler
    Herb Kohler
    • Cafe Man
    Peter MacNeill
    Peter MacNeill
    • Mack
    Cliff Saunders
    Cliff Saunders
    • Ralph
    Patricia Stutz
    • Ralph's Wife
    • (as Pat Stutz)
    Julian Richings
    Julian Richings
    • Wylie
    Ian Tracey
    Ian Tracey
    • Tom
    Rod Wilson
    Rod Wilson
    • Gus
    Diego Diablo Del Mar
    Diego Diablo Del Mar
    • Ballester
    • (as Diego Del Mar)
    • Direção
      • Kevin Costner
    • Roteiristas
      • Lauran Paine
      • Craig Storper
    • Elenco e equipe completos
    • Produção, bilheteria e muito mais no IMDbPro

    Avaliações de usuários593

    7,481.9K
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    Avaliações em destaque

    7rosscinema

    Old fashioned western with heart

    Why studios don't make more westerns is beyond me. Some of them are downright unwatchable like "Young Guns" and its sequel but there have been some extremely well made films like "Unforgiven" and "Tombstone" so I'm at a loss as to why more are not made. Thank you Kevin Costner! This story is about four men who are herding their cattle through a certain area and they stop near a town to get supplies. The crew is headed by Boss Spearman (Robert Duvall) and his second in charge is Charley Waite (Costner). They send Mose (Abraham Benrubi) to get supplies and after a day or so he doesn't return. Boss and Charley go to find him leaving Button (Diego Luna) to watch the herd. In town they find Mose beaten badly and locked up in the local jail. A rich rancher named Denton Baxter (Michael Gambon) hates "Freegrazers" and tells them to take their man and keep moving. Baxter controls the sheriff (James Russo) and also has many thugs on his payroll. Back at the herd some of Baxters men have been following them so Boss has an idea of going after them instead of running. That night they confront them and smash their rifles but when they get back Mose has been killed and Button is wounded badly. They take him to the local doctor and meet his sister Sue (Annette Bening) and Charley takes a shine. Boss and Charley don't like to be told where to graze their cattle and they want revenge for the death of Mose. A final gunfight in town is inevitable and Charley reveals that he killed many men in the war. This film was directed by Costner and its very well made. He seems to have found his mark as a directer with this genre. Costner allows the story to unfold on its own terms and the pacing is deliberate which is welcomed after watching so many Hollywood films and their quick edits. The film should be seen on the big screen to be appreciated. The scenery is beautiful and their are so many shots with skylines and mountains and wide open prairies and these shots help tell the story in the film. The scenery is important and gives the film a look that helps you relate to the characters when they speak of not wanting to be told where they can go. The characters are well written and they let out things about themselves little by little as the story is told. Duvall's character is a man of high pride and also a stubborn side and he's not afraid to stand up for himself even if it means he might die. Costner plays a man with a hard past and he seems to be living his life and coming to grips with his experiences in the war at the same time. Charley states that he doesn't have a problem with killing and we believe him. The romance between Costner and Bening seems forced and Bening looks a little to old to be a woman that never married. The film goes on about 15 minutes to long and Costner has not one, but two goodbye scenes with Bening. This is a minor complaint because this is a very entertaining film and after a summer of watching hyper-kinetic Hollywood junk, It's a movie that is very welcomed. Hear that Hollywood?
    9klindon-38400

    Some people get better at acting with age

    Costner admitted early in his career he was not an "artist", but rather a commodity, or star. I don't disagree. He was a handsome face but he always had an authenticity in his performances too. Very natural on camera. In Open Range, he's at his best. He's the type of guy who is just comfortable in front of the camera and you look at him and feel he's being honest. An honest performance that makes you feel he's not acting in any way. He reminds me of Gary Cooper in that way. A guy who isn't bullsh**ting and you believe every word he says. I love him in this movie. I love the way he speaks to the woman he can't express his love to. I love her in this too.
    9polarbeardad

    Most realistic film gunfight I've ever seen.

    Once again, Robert Duval deserves Oscar consideration for this one. The dialogue was crisp so kudos to the writing team. The attention to detail must also be applauded. During the first walk through of the town, the realism was mind blowing. The detail of the main characters trying to cross the street as the water rushed by was incredible well done. Who couldn't relate to that?

    This one is a must see. A true period film
    7ma-cortes

    Excellent western film magnificently performed and directed by Kevin Costner

    ¨Open Range¨ is a classic western. It's spectacular and riveting. The movie centers about facing off between settlers and cattlemen.

    In the cowboys group we find an ex gunslinger(Kevin Costner), an old man (Robert Duvall) and a younger (Diego Luna). They'll have to fight against a landowner (Michael Gambon), a corrupt sheriff( James Russo), an assassin (Kim Coates), among others . Meanwhile the ex-gunfighter will fall in love with a spinster (Annette Bening).

    The final showdown between the contenders is breathtaking, gunfight is likeness to "O.K. Corral duel¨.

    The film is awesome , sets are extraordinaries and landscapes are wonderful.

    The movie blends action, violence, a love story ,drama ,shootouts and is a fascinating film.

    Direction by Kevin Costner is of first rate as ¨dancing with wolves¨. Cinematography by Michael Muro is glimmer and Michael Kamen's musical score is atmospheric. Runtime film is overlong however is neither tiring , nor boring but entertaining.

    Rating: 7'5 /10 above average. Well worth watching.
    FilmFlaneur

    The Best Since Unforgiven

    Costner's third film as a director, his fourth if you include his work with Kevin Reynolds on Waterworld (1995), is another Western. One says 'another', but upon reflection it is obvious that it's a genre that, creatively, he's hardly left. After the highly successful Dances With Wolves (1990) he directed with Kevin Reynolds - albeit in uncredited fashion - the critically mauled The Postman (1997). The latter was nothing less than a reworking of the familiar Pony Express story, and for good measure threw in explicit references to John Ford along the way. Waterworld's ocean setting did nothing to disguise the fact that that was a film that owed another massive debt to the great American genre: sea fort, lone riders, wide-open watery frontier and all. Costner also did sterling work as Wyatt Earp in Kasdan's 1994 film of the same name - a substantial project, and one close enough in manner to his own to suggest more than a passing creative influence from its star.

    In Open Range, Costner again has the lead: as Charley Waite, former gunfighter, now sharing ownership of a free grazing cattle drive. Together with Boss Spearman (Robert Duvall), and two others they reach Harmonville where they soon encounter a corrupt town Marshal (James Russo) and rancher (an excellent Michael Gambon) who threaten their way of life. They also discover others who prove sympathetic to their cause, like the sister of the town's doctor Sue Barlow (Annette Bening). There's growing suspense as an inevitable showdown looms ("Men are gonna get killed here today, Sue, and I'm gonna kill 'em...") Waite's personal life, and his romance gradually comes to the fore until its crisis, as well as the combat, mark the end of the film.

    On screen Costner shares equal honours with the septuagenarian Robert Duvall, whose personal philosophy that "Man's got a right to protect his property and his life, and we ain't gonna let no rancher or his lawman take either," informs much of the main action. Crusty and fearsome, Spearman's dauntless words recall those of John Wayne's J.B. Books in The Shootist (1976) who expressed broadly similar sentiments: "I won't be wronged. I won't be insulted. I won't be laid a-hand on. I don't do these things to other people, and I require the same from them." In either case its an old man speaking, one fiercely independent after a life of hardship and who won't be trifled with. Open Range takes its main impetus from exactly that sort of unwelcome interference, and resembles Eastwood's Unforgiven in that a good deal of the narrative consists of a determined settling of accounts, an unrelieved search for moral recompense outside the law after an initial trespass against the innocent. What is started almost casually is finished deliberately and by the authority given the wronged: "Ours ain't writ by no tin star, bought and paid for, Marshall. It's writ by us, and we aim to enforce it," says Boss. Like Eastwood's film, Open Range also features a retired gunman who has recourse to his skills to help salvage a situation, and some of the best scenes with Costner's character concern his dispassionate and professional preparation for gunplay. Like William Munny before, Charley Waite has something of an avenging angel about him, whose cold consideration of his trade is filmed completely without irony.

    Open Range has all the hallmarks of Costner the western auteur: an expansive, almost leisurely tone, supporting roles for loyal canines, a certain solemnity and respect for his conservative cinematic predecessors being foremost amongst them. As others have said, Costner directs as if Peckinpah and Leone had never existed, and the present work is no exception. Characteristically, it contains none of the self-indulgent nostalgia or cynicism common in the genre since the 1960s. Despite a visual quote from The Wild Bunch (1969) for instance, as men take their long walk abreast to the confrontation, the final shootout of Open Range owes far more to the traditional showdown of Gunfight At The OK Corral (1957) than the apocalyptic finale of Peckinpah's masterpiece. Slow burning, character driven and ruminative, Costner's latest has been criticised by some for its too-deliberate narrative pacing. For an MTV-generation viewing audience, unused to an older, more leisurely way of showing things, such issues are understandable, although no one used to a filmmaker taking his time to tell a good story will complain. Indeed, part of the great success of Open Range is the way it single-mindedly sustains an atmosphere of fateful suspense.

    One thing that no one disputes: Duvall is magnificent in his part, a performance that may well prove a capstone to a long and prestigious career. Costner apparently had the actor in mind for the part from the first, a decision justified entirely and one of the highlights of the film. In fact if the film's has a weakness it can be put down to that fact that Spearman holds the stage so successfully, and for so long. Waite's own romance, starting so tentatively, is somewhat overshadowed by the more urgent prerogatives of his partner and when it finally flowers, it leads to some scenes which could have, with prudence been cut back to greater effect. Having said that, Costner's awkward farewell to Miss Barlow, saying so much with so little, just before the fight begins, is another memorable scene where sentimentality is kept happily at bay. It is once the violence is over, and the great tension is dissipated, that matters are drawn out a little too much. A little stoicism might have led to a more memorable close.

    Like many good westerns, Open Range's central concerns lie around personal freedom and moral rectitude - the balance between which gives a good deal of the narrative its necessary tension. Like crossing the flood, which pours down the main street of Harmonville, the participants have to choose one side or the other. It's a film ultimately less about a gunfighter settling down, than of how men abide their self-justified actions. In the disc extras, Costner draws an illuminating parallel between the scene in his film in which Spearman and Waite confront the jayhawkers and The Oxbow Incident. In Wellman's 1943 classic, a rushed lynching leads to a disastrous error and mutual guilt. In Costner's film, to whom guilt is assigned is never in doubt, and indeed Spearman initially has to hold Waite back from overstepping the mark - an action which he comes to regret. "I never had any problem with killing," says Waite at one point. Like Eastwood's Munny, once justified he seeks stark retribution without compunction.

    There's only one gunfight in Open Range, but it is worth the wait. Spread out almost as leisurely as the rest of the film, Costner and his cinematographer James Muro use a range of shots throughout the violent events to achieve effects both chaotic and planned at the same time. (Incidentally for a filmmaker who prides himself on accuracy, Costner has his hero 'fan' off shots, a notoriously inaccurate way of discharging a gun, but that's a minor distraction.) It's a notable confrontation, an extended set piece sequence that is one of the director's best and confirms his film the finest western since Unforgiven.

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    Você sabia?

    Editar
    • Curiosidades
      Originally, Touchstone Pictures had Kevin Costner top-billed over Robert Duvall, but Costner asked the studio to top-bill Duvall instead.
    • Erros de gravação
      Charlie fires 16-17 rapid fires shots from one single-action, six-shot revolver - without reloading. In fact, during the first volley, he fires four random shots and then actually "fans" the revolver and fires ten additional shots into a bad-guy gunslinger in less than seven seconds, without changing weapons or re-loading. And then fires a few more rounds at still standing gun-men. Costner admitted in an interview for this film that he has always wanted to film a scene where he fans a six-gun way over the realistic amount of shots, and that this scene was indeed very enjoyable to make.
    • Citações

      Sue Barlow: I don't have the answers, Charley. But I know that people get confused in this life about what they want, and what they've done, and what they think they should've because of it. Everything they think they are or did, takes hold so hard that it won't let them see what they can be.

    • Versões alternativas
      AMC version severely edits Butler's death. The sound of the gunshot that kills him is played at a lower volume, and the scenes of him falling back is sped up, so as to avoid showing the hole in his head from the shot.
    • Conexões
      Featured in Siskel & Ebert & the Movies: Le Divorce/The Housekeeper/American Splendor/Open Range (2003)
    • Trilhas sonoras
      Holding All My Love for You
      Written by Michael Kamen (BMI) and Julianna Raye (BMI)

      Performed by Julianna Raye

      Produced by James Harrah

      (P) (C) K-Man Corp. (BMI) / Ziffy Music, Inc. (BMI) / Open Range Productions USA, Inc. (BMI)

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    Perguntas frequentes20

    • How long is Open Range?Fornecido pela Alexa

    Detalhes

    Editar
    • Data de lançamento
      • 14 de novembro de 2003 (Brasil)
    • País de origem
      • Estados Unidos da América
    • Idioma
      • Inglês
    • Também conhecido como
      • Pacto de justicia
    • Locações de filme
      • Stoney Indian Reservation, Alberta, Canadá
    • Empresas de produção
      • Touchstone Pictures
      • Cobalt Media Group
      • Beacon Pictures
    • Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro

    Bilheteria

    Editar
    • Orçamento
      • US$ 22.000.000 (estimativa)
    • Faturamento bruto nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 58.331.254
    • Fim de semana de estreia nos EUA e Canadá
      • US$ 14.047.781
      • 17 de ago. de 2003
    • Faturamento bruto mundial
      • US$ 68.296.293
    Veja informações detalhadas da bilheteria no IMDbPro

    Especificações técnicas

    Editar
    • Tempo de duração
      • 2 h 19 min(139 min)
    • Cor
      • Color
    • Mixagem de som
      • DTS
      • Dolby Digital
      • SDDS
    • Proporção
      • 2.35 : 1

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